The
Peter Auriol Homepage
Editions & Translations on the Web
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The idea with Editions and Translations on the
Web is to assemble links to as many preliminary editions or translations
from the works of Peter Auriol as possible. If in the process of your work
on Auriol, you have made editions or translations that you have already
put out on the web or that you would be willing to make available here,
please write to Russ
Friedman.
Terms of Use
Nota Bene: unless otherwise noted, as with
all works in progress, some limitations apply to the use of every edition
and translation presented on this page. The editions and translations presented
here are meant for scholarly or teaching purposes only, and by no means
for re-publication without the express consent of the editor or translator
of the material in question. Any use of the editions and translations presented
here in teaching or published research must be expressly acknowledged,
using the name of the text edited or translated as it is given here, along
with the name of the editor or translator and the web-address of the present
page.
Robert Pasnau has translated what he describes
as "a dense but rewarding discussion of the ontological status of accidents"
from Auriol's IV Sent. (d.12, q.1, a.1). The discussion is entitled
"Does an accident have an essence and reality that is bounded and complete?",
and is found as a PDF file as part of Pasnau's Homepage
-- specfically here.
(The translation by Robert Pasnau and Charles Bolyard
of Scriptum,Prooemium, q. 2 to which there was a link before, is
now in print in The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical
Texts.Volume III: Mind and Knowledge(Cambridge UP, 2002), pp.
178-218.)
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This page last modified August 28, 2003